Title: Power from the Sun: Solar, Hydro and Wind
1Power from the SunSolar, Hydro and Wind
- Dennis Silverman
- U. C. Irvine
- Physics and Astronomy
2Solar Power
- Most of all energy we use comes or has come from
the sun. - Fossil fuels arise from fossil plants and animals
converted to carbon (coal), or hydrocarbons
(methane and petroleum). - We are 1/3 to 1/2 through the process of burning
hundreds of millions of years of fossil fuel
accumulations in two centuries.
3Free Solar
- The sun would heat the planet to 0 Fahrenheit
without the atmosphere. - The sun runs the greenhouse that keeps the earth
warmed up to an average of 58 F with the
greenhouse gas atmosphere. - It evaporates the oceans to provide the rain and
fresh water for crops and drinking water and
hydropower. - It powers the weather to provide winds.
- It grows our crops and forests through
photosynthesis - Solar energy provides our daylight and moonlight.
- It heats our buildings in the daytime, and the
sea and land hold heat for the night.
4Pharoah Akhenaten and Queen NefertitiMonotheism
of Aten, the Sun, 1353-1336 BC Possible father of
Tutankhamen (King Tut)
5Solar Manipulation
- The next best way to use solar is to modify its
effects. - Reflective roofs to keep buildings cool
- Reflective windows to keep out direct sunlight
during the summer, and keep heat in during the
winter - Windows and skylights for indoor daytime lighting
6Paint Your House White? Santorini
7Direct Solar Energy
- Mediterranean climates now using rooftop or
nearby solar water heating Greece, Israel,
Japan. It is 80 efficient. - Solar clothes drying
8Solar Photovoltaic Electricity
- Silicon wafers doped to form photovoltaic cells
- Power is free, but
- Large wafers still thick and crystal grown as
chips, so still expensive - Cost still 3 to 10 times as expensive as fossil
fuel power - Efficiency only 10 to 15, so large areas needed
- Daily and yearly average only 1/5 of maximum
power capacity installed - Dont need storage if send excess power back over
the grid - Storage could be in charging car batteries or in
hydrogen fuel, or - Concentrate on using more energy during the
daytime - Silicon valley investigating thin film disk
technology to make cheaper
9Unelectrified Areas
- Two billion people do not have electricity
- To save on kerosene lanterns, solar cells with
batteries and lcd lights have been developed for
nighttime lighting - Also used to charge freeway phones
10Californias Million Solar Roofs
- California SB1 (Senate Bill 1) to provide rebates
to equip solar power installations - Goal is 3 gigawatts solar by 2017
- This could be 3 kw/household, at 9/watt is
27,000/household - Companies rebated per kwh generated
- New homes must offer solar option by 2011
- 500,000 more homes can be added to generating
electricity into the power network - 2.8 billion CA cost, 30 Federal rebate, up to
18 billion total cost, but for less average
electricity than a nuclear plant at 2-3 billion. - Could only nearly pay if it brings down costs
through economies of scale, - or if it leads to technological breakthrough
through research and competition - Only 100 million for solar water heating
11U. S. Solar Resources
12U. S. Tracking Mirror Solar
13Solar Trough Mirrors
- Suitable For Large Systems
- Grid-connected Power
- 30-200 MW size
- Heats mineral oil to hundreds of degrees
- Then vaporizes a fluid to drive a turbine
14Dish with Sterling Engine
- Modular
- Remote Applications
- Demonstration Installations
- High Efficiency
- Conventional Construction
- Heat expands gas and drives piston
15Solar Tea? Tibet, Dreprung Monastery
16Solar Tower
- Suitable For Large Systems
- Grid-connected Power
- 30-200 MW size
- Potentially Lower Cost
- Potentially Efficient Thermal Storage
- Molten Salt heated, averages out solar input
- Can store heat overnight
17Cost Of Energy(Max Lechtman)
- Trough Dish/Engine Tower
- 2000 11.8 17.9 13.6
- 2010 7.6 6.1 5.2
- 2020 7.2 5.5 4.2
- 2030 6.8 5.2 4.2
- Cents/kWh in 1997
18Hydropower
- Of the renewable energy sources that generate
electricity, hydropower is the most often used.
It accounted for 7 percent of total U.S.
electricity generation and 75 percent of
generation from renewables in 2004 - Over one-half of the total U.S. hydroelectric
capacity for electricity generation is
concentrated in three States (Washington,
California and Oregon) with approximately 27
percent in Washington, the location of the
Nations largest hydroelectric facility the
Grand Coulee Dam
19How Hydropower Works
20(No Transcript)
21World-wide, about 20 of all electricity is
generated by hydropower.
22Glen Canyon Dam and Power Station
23Aswan Dam on the Nile River
24Wind Power - Mykonos
25Clipper Ship
26World Wind Capacity. Total now 74 Gigawatts
worldwide, with 65 in Europe. Market growing at
32 a year. 3.3 of European electricity now
from wind. 1 of U.S. electricity.
27Wind Generation Physics
- Power proportional to the cube of the wind
velocity. - (v² from Bernoulli pressure for force on
wingshaped propeller, times a distance per second
of rotating propeller, which is proportional to
v.) - Most of energy from small bursts.
- ½ of energy comes in 15 of the time.
- Average capacity factor is 35 of the maximum.
- Wind turbines best spaced 3-5 times the rotor
diameter perpendicular to the wind, and 5-10
times the diameter parallel to the wind.
28Virginias Switzerland Wind Power Proposal
- 39 towers of 400 feet height
- 2 million per tower at 1 megawatt
- So about a 40 megawatt peak project
- Enough power for 15,000 homes x
- 12,000 kwh/yr / 9,000 hours/year
- 20 million watts average
- Implies a 50 duty cycle
- To compare to a 1 gigawatt nuclear plant, would
require 50 such projects, or about 2,000 wind
towers and 2 billion.
29England, Germany, Netherlands10 Gigawatt
Foundation Project
- Proposal for 2,000 wind turbines of 5 megawatts
each to make 10 gigawatts - Could power more than 8 million homes
- Would cover 3,000 square kilometers
- In the southern North Sea
30Here Comes The Sun (by George Harrison)
Conclusions
- All renewable energy is local Adapt to locally
available sources of renewable energy - Energy conservation is still the cheapest form of
making energy available - In California, solar water heating is the next
cheapest source of energy - Hydro should be maintained
- Solar arrays are efficient and should be
supported - Wind power is about the cost of nuclear. Have to
find the right location. Siting a problem with
views, noise, birds. - Nuclear power is omitted from renewable, but
should be included as it also is non-polluting
for greenhouse gases. - Solar photovoltaic needs more research and
improvement, and is currently a wasteful
investment.